FALL RIVER — A newspaper photograph and TV news footage of state police detectives searching Aaron Hernandez’s North Attleborough home last summer contradicts a trooper’s testimony last week that he served the search warrant and carried it in a folder with accompanying documents, Hernandez’s lawyers said in court documents filed Monday.

The defense team is seeking a court order for unedited TV news footage of police arriving at Hernandez’s home on June 18, 2013, to execute a search warrant related to the Odin Lloyd murder investigation.

A CBS news broadcast from that day shows an unnamed trooper presenting a paper to a woman who answered the door. Trooper Michael Cherven is behind the lead officer and is not carrying any folder or documents, Hernandez’s lawyers said.

According to the defense team, that footage contradicts Cherven’s testimony last Wednesday in Fall River Superior Court that he served the warrant and that he was carrying a manila file folder containing the original warrant, a copy of the warrant and an affidavit filed in application.

The defense team is asking the court to compel the WBZ, WCVB, WHDH, NECN and WFXT television stations to hand over their raw footage from the search warrant.

“That footage will likely show in an uninterrupted fashion the outset of the police search of the house on that date. Once the parties have been able to review that additional footage, they will be in a position to advise the court whether a further hearing or argument is necessary,” defense attorneys Michael Fee and James Sultan wrote.

Hernandez’s lawyers are trying to suppress evidence — home surveillance system footage, two cellphones and three iPad tablets — police seized from the house on the grounds that there was no probable cause at the time that the former Patriots All-Pro tight end had committed a crime.

Also at issue is whether the search warrant authorized police to take the cellphones and iPads because they were GPS-capable. The affidavit filed in application with the warrant mentions that detectives wanted to review Hernandez’s GPS records, but the actual search warrant does not mention a GPS among the items to be seized.

Judge E. Susan Garsh has asked whether the affidavit was attached to the warrant when a clerk magistrate signed it and when police executed it at Hernandez’s home. Cherven testified during last Wednesday’s hearing that the warrant, affidavit and application form were paper-clipped together in a folder when they were presented to a clerk magistrate on June 18, 2013.

Prosecutors allege Hernandez, 24, orchestrated Lloyd’s murder after a disagreement two nights earlier at a Boston nightclub. Lloyd was shot five times with a .45-caliber handgun in the North Attleborough Industrial Park on June 17, 2013. Hernandez, who is being held without bail at the Bristol County House of Correction in Dartmouth, is also charged with two counts of murder after his alleged role in a 2012 double homicide in Boston.